Edited Mark Litvak (June 29, 2016 07:12:52 AM)
Originally posted by Dustin De Leeuw:“Actually, at Competitive REL, we do expect you to be familiar with the rules– and that includes the rules and changes to the MTR. I understand that this feels pretty harsh, and I appreciate that you wanted to help, but next time, if you believe something illegal has happened in a game, ask the players to pause the match and come talk to a judge away from the table. That way, there's no chance of you accidentally providing strategic advice.”
“Last time I read the MTR, it was assumed that maximum trample damaged was assigned to the defending player. So I believe they just both made a GRV and that the HJ should investigate NAP for cheating. I was not providing strategic advice, just pointing out that they broke the game rules and did something very illegal. And as a mere player, you can't expect me to read the new MTR every 3 months. I think you damage tournament integrity in general if you punish me now by effectively DQ'ing me (yes, a Match Loss right before start of Top 8 in which I would play, that's effectively the same as a DQ).”
/Devil's Advocate.
Originally posted by IPG 1. General Philosophy:
If a minor violation is quickly handled by the players to their mutual satisfaction a judge does not need to intervene.
Edited Simon Ahrens (June 29, 2016 08:45:58 AM)
Originally posted by Bartłomiej Wieszok:Then A would have told N to take two damage instead of one. I do not see the relevance here.
@Simon: and what about if attacker was 2/2 but was blocked by 1/1 creature?
Originally posted by Bartłomiej Wieszok:He is not allowed to forget the ability. It is not a missed trigger. If he did not say anything about trample we assume he “really wanted to kill the blocker” and that would most probably be my ruling if the spectator had called us instead of talking to the players and this is something I would have told the players after they had fixed the problem by themselves.
player could forget about that whole ability, but from rules point of view, he's allowed to do that
Originally posted by Bartłomiej Wieszok:I do not understand what you are trying to tell me here.
If he forget about +1/+1 and trample or just about trample, outcome is that same, he hasn't assigned 1 damage to his opponent. As a Judge I would assume, that he remembered both, but choose to assign X+1 damage to blocking creature, because, we can do that. Its unlikely, and to determine if he is missing thole +1/+1 I would stick around and watch how the game will go after that.
Originally posted by Bartłomiej Wieszok:
@Edward: and what about upcoming combats? Now AP realised that his creature have trample and will not make mistake and assign damages optimally. If I control Wind Drake, I have my opponent at 2 life without any way to block it, but I forget about flying and don't attack with him, according to your reasoning, it would be fine to tell me in 2nd Main “hey, you had lethal attack” since we are past point that decision what creature I attack with. However now I will know to attack in my upcoming turn.
Originally posted by Bartłomiej Wieszok:This is entirelly different everybody would rule the Wind Drake example as OA.
@Edward: and what about upcoming combats? Now AP realised that his creature have trample and will not make mistake and assign damages optimally. If I control Wind Drake, I have my opponent at 2 life without any way to block it, but I forget about flying and don't attack with him, according to your reasoning, it would be fine to tell me in 2nd Main “hey, you had lethal attack” since we are past point that decision what creature I attack with. However now I will know to attack in my upcoming turn.
Originally posted by Eskil Myrenberg:This is another example of my mistaken sentences, sry. I know than the impact in the game isn´t relevant when judging (unless in invetigations). If Nap was at 1 or 60 lifes, the problem and santion will be the same.
Do you feel the impact on the game should be taken into account when
determining OA :)?
Originally posted by Eskil Myrenberg:I think this is OA… but I feel mysel on events like a “punisher searching the evil” and maibe i don´t have enought exp to recognize the line betten yes OA and no OA arguments.
If yes, do we only OA if we determine the strategic advice was good and
should the Judge be expected to determine this?
If no, what arguments remain for this to not be OA?
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